Benedikt Korf / Michelle Engeler
Geographies of violence
Pages 221 – 237
In his Hettner-lecture, Michael Watts asserted that violence might be understood as
´struggle over geography´. Surprisingly, geography is largely missing in the contemporary
debates on the incidence of civil wars, the dynamics of war economies
and "new" wars. These debates have produced universalistic, nomothetical
statements about the causes and dynamics of contemporary war economies and
have focused on analyzing the economic incentives of combatants and fighters,
thereby neglecting the spatial contextualities and institutional ambiguities of war
economies. In this paper, we suggest to bring geography back in focus and develop
a conceptual framework that studies geographies of violence using three analytical
concepts: governable spaces, spaces of agency and subjectivities. These categories
are linked with the politics of scale. We illustrate this framework with examples from
the Sri Lankan and Sierra Leonean civil wars. Our studies suggest that geographies
of violence produce complex entanglements of survival and war economies that are
manifested in the spatio-temporal dynamics of different actors´ vulnerabilities and
agencies.
schließen